questionmark, on 05 March 2012 - 09:14 PM, said:
They are on the "it happens but not so fast" trip. All I can say about it is that we don't really know how fast it was happening then. How much glaciation was there during the middle ages? We know for certain that Greenland was mostly ice free when the Vikings settled there (around 900 AD) so we can assume that the de-glaciation period was already terminated by then. The highest temperatures were not yet reached and would not be for another 100 years. We are already past those temperatures. So ask me again 100 years after Greenland is ice free if the temperatures raised more then or now.
The comparison stinks. But as far as statistic goes they are making a valid point. The problem is that paper is patient. So are statistics.
Ok.
But I must say, there is absolutely no way you read those two papers fully, and understood them in 16 minutes. From my post to your reply.
I used actually around 5 days to go through them, check every source, read every source and visited my science books+wiki to understand it the science. And I really enjoyed it.
Perhaps I'm just a slow reader.
There is actually enough data and enough information, that I completely forgot they even spoke of Greenland. I'm tempted to even look at the research again to see if Greenland was a major topic or not.
My enlightenment had nothing to do with Greenland really. It had to do with the data that speaks loudly about cosmic clouds, intensity of cosmic rays and their interaction with the solar system, some physics, some particle physics and the science of a star's magnetic fields and planets.
I remember nothing about Greenland actually. Honestly.
=)
If you do not wish to have an open mind in science(sorry if I'm preaching, I do that), you should stay away from it. Politics might be better for you. Science is for the curious, the open minded and the philosophers. True knowledge is the gift of science, if you can not embrace knowledge in all aspects, you are not receiving anything positive from science.
Perhaps, one must first realize to some degree that righteousness, just and wisdom are the key ingredients to soaking in the fullness of knowledge. And true wisdom is held within the ability to understand that no one man can know all, and there is always something new to learn, and mistakes are plenty.